Survive the Night

Book Review: Survive the Night by Riley Sager by A.M. Molloy

Survive the Night

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Survive the Night 〰️

This is the third book I've read by Sager, and I've got to say, I'm now a huge fan. I loved everything I've read and can't wait to devour more of his books. Sager is excellent at building tension and writing an unreliable narrator that makes you question everyone and everything. (Though I think Charlie's story may be his most unreliable narrator yet, and I'm here for it).

I realized (a little too late because I can never pick up on clues) that Robbie was the Campus Killer, and his reveal was a slight letdown, but that didn't deter my enjoyment. As great as it was having Maddie's murder solved, I think I would have preferred that the killer hadn't been found, as Charlie stated that life isn't like movies where things don't get wrapped up all pretty. I mean, Robbie could have still been a bad guy in some way, but it felt a little last-minute to have Robbie be revealed as the killer. An open ending on the murder case would have subverted readers' expectations and probably would have gone over well. (Though I'm still not mad at it. I'm glad Maddie got justice, but still).

Also, it took me way too long to realize why all the chapter titles were written like a screenplay scene intro. (This is nothing on the author; that's just me being an idiot. I knew it was screenplay text right away, but it's embarrassing how long it took me to realize why it was screenplay text). That said, the whole book reads like a movie (like Charlie's mind!), and I wouldn't be upset if this became a movie. I'd watch the hell out of this.

That being said, I was hooked right from the beginning. I wonder if I would have made the same decisions Charlie made. There were plenty of moments where I wanted to scream at her when she had the opportunity to other escape or ask for help, but she acted differently. I get why she acted the way she did. Even if her decisions weren't always the smartest, I can see how anyone else would do the same. I might have done the same in this situation. (Hopefully, I'll never have to find out if that's true or not). Either way, it made for a fascinating read.

I think Sager is an author to look out for, and I highly recommend this book or any of his other works. I haven't read all his books (yet), but I haven't found one where I wasn't hooked from the very first page.